The Night I Took Our Daughter Away Chapter 02
She wore cream cashmere, soft makeup, and the fragile look that made people lower their voices around her. Luca was out, so she had her driver deliver the box as an apology for missing Mia’s recital.
The label made my stomach tighten. Mia had a severe pistachio allergy. The staff knew it, her school knew it, and anyone who had shared more than one dinner with us knew it.
“There are no nuts in these, are there?” I asked.
Vivienne’s eyes widened. “Elena, I would never risk Mia’s health. I only wanted to do something nice.”
I sent the pastries to the kitchen for checking, but while I took a call from Mia’s doctor, Nico handed her a small cake. Mia trusted him. She took one bite before I could stop her.
Within minutes, her lips swelled and her breathing broke into thin, panicked gasps.
I carried her to the armored SUV myself. On the ride to the private clinic, she clutched my collar too hard to cry. I called Luca three times. He missed the first call, declined the second, and finally answered with Vivienne crying in the background.
“Mia is having an allergic reaction,” I said. “I’m taking her to the clinic.”
Luca went quiet. “Dr. Harris is there, right?”
“Yes, but she can barely breathe.”
“Then she’ll be all right.” His voice lowered, already turning away from us. “Vivienne is falling apart. Let me get her settled, and I’ll be there right after.”
Right after. He loved those words. They made every absence sound temporary and every broken promise sound almost reasonable.
By the time Mia had epinephrine in her system and an oxygen mask on her face, he still had not come. I stood beside the bed, watching the monitor rise and dip, and hated myself for still looking at the door every time footsteps passed.
Vivienne arrived first. She hovered in the doorway, eyes red, voice soft enough to sound harmless. “I truly didn’t know there was pistachio paste in the filling. Sometimes I wish Dante had never taken that bullet for Luca. Then he would still be here, I would still have a home, and you would not hate me so much.”
Luca walked in just in time to hear her break on the last words.
He checked Mia’s monitor, saw that she was stable, and turned to catch Vivienne when she swayed. She folded against him, and he held her with the ease of long habit, murmuring comfort into her hair.
That was the moment my anger went cold.
If he had come in breathless, if he had taken one look at our daughter and forgotten the rest of the world for five minutes, some foolish part of me might have softened. Instead, he came in calm, confirmed Mia would live, and gave his warmth to the woman whose mistake had nearly killed her.
“Elena,” he said later, when Vivienne stepped into the hall, “I know you’re upset. But she didn’t do it on purpose. Don’t turn this into another war.”
Another war. As if asking him to choose his daughter first was me picking a fight.
I looked at Mia’s small hand inside mine and finally stopped wanting him to understand.
Later that night, Mia woke hoarse and exhausted. Her first glance went to the door.
“Did Daddy come?”
“He came by,” I said.
She was quiet for a long time. Then she turned her face toward me and whispered, “Mommy, can we go somewhere we don’t have to wait for Daddy anymore?”
That was when the last piece of me let go.
I was not leaving only for myself.

